Tag: Lifeedited - Page 8

Malena Georgieva manages to survive in 200 square feet, smaller than most hotel rooms. And while it is unlikely that she can serve a dinner for twelve as Graham wants to in the LifeEdited program, it is cozy and according

Can you crowdsource design? Can you run an international ideas competition online, with over 300 submissions, commenting, inviting change, watching schemes evolve, and then judge it? Evidently yes, because Graham Hill and the LifeEdited team at Jovoto

I have been consistently blown away by the quality of the submissions for the LifeEdited project. It is now the review period where readers can vote for their favourite project. There is so much to chose from, even dpet's homage to Daniel Libeskind

Ben Brown of PlaceMakers has been talking about living in smaller spaces and cottage neighbourhoods for years, but recently got to practice what he preaches, living for three months in the original 308 square foot Katrina

I am really beginning to look forward to the Interior Design Show in Toronto in two weeks; all kinds of interesting stuff is coming in over the transom. Designer Davide Tonizzo shows his new Gig, transformers that he calls "four-track furniture." He

We're crowdsourcing design at the LifeEdited project, a contest to design some or all of Graham Hill's 420 square foot apartment in New York. As the clock runs out, (just a few days left to enter) I have to say that the ideas submitted so far are

We keep looking for great ideas for Graham Hill's LifeEdited project, for different ways to live and work in small spaces. Andy's oven lounge might be the perfect thing; Graham doesn't cook a lot, so why take up so much space

A decade ago in Toronto, Julia West Home introduced a line of tables, beds and even spinning bookcases that served multiple functions and took up less space. I designed some of them (see them here), convinced that this was

When writing LifeEdited: What We Can Learn From Camping Equipment, I asked "Why do camping equipment designers make pots and pans that all stack together and take up the space of only the largest pots, while a regular pot

Images credit: Knife and Saw
Designboom shows this bike shelf from Chris Brigham, a graphic designer gone 3D and now making furniture under the name Knife and Saw. . Living in San Francisco and visiting friends in New York, he "noticed that there is a

images credit aat+makoto yokomizo architects
TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his footprint and live happily with less space, less stuff and less waste on less money, but with more design. He calls it "LifeEdited." You can

TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his footprint and live happily with less space, less stuff and less waste on less money, but with more design. He calls it "LifeEdited." You can help: Enter the

Image credit Lloyd Alter, after John Straube
TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his footprint and live happily with less space, less stuff and less waste on less money, but with more design. He calls it "LifeEdited." You can

TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his footprint and live happily with less space, less stuff and less waste on less money, but with more design. He calls it "LifeEdited." You can help:

After they graciously promoted LifeEdited, we learned from DesignSpotter that the Disney movie TRON "influenced whole generations of later-on designers, architects, technicians and developers worldwide." So they are having their own competition.